teaching students how to learn: designing courses that...
TRANSCRIPT
Teaching Students How to
Learn: Designing Courses that
Build Successful, Self-Directed
Deep Learners
SENCER Summer Institute -- 2018
Stephen Carroll, PhD
Metacognitive Notes
Notes on what’s
being presentedThoughts,
connections
& feelings
that arise
Summary:
Date, Course, Topic
This makes sense!
Q: How does this connect with … ?
Priming information
For Best Results:
Review Summary
within 24 hours
Summary Reflections:
ASAP – before sleeping
What’s worth reviewing &
remembering?
Problem: Low Success/
Graduation Rates
United States
Percentage of
students who
graduate within 150%
of nominal time49*
Source: http://www.oecd.org/edu/highlights.pdf
Problem: Low Success/
Graduation Rates
United States
Percentage of
students who
graduate within 150%
of nominal time49*
Source: http://www.oecd.org/edu/highlights.pdf
This number has changed very
little over the last 45+ years.
St1 St2
Apparent Cause: Pedagogies
Based on Passive Learning
20-70% FAIL to
complete college
20-50% complete
college but with a MEDIOCRE EDUCATION
10-20% ExcelCurrent Practice:
Apparent Cause: Outdated
Pedagogy
PASSIVE LEARNING (an oxymoron)
Students’ existing (high school) learning habits aim at low-level thinking skills and passive, dependent learning. They are taught not to risk or to engage.
In college those learning habits don’t work well.
Consequent motivation and engagement problems further erode students’ confidence, academic performance—and learning.
Poor learning skills severely limits their potential for success in college—and in 21st century life.
Root Cause: Focus on Teaching
We don’t teach students
how to learn.
We have learned a lot
about how people learn
over the past 15 years.
Why don’t we use what
we’ve learned to improve
our students’ learning?
Epistemological gap
Epistemology of Teaching
What are your most important
goals as a teacher?
(Quickly jot down 2-3 of your most
important goals.)
Part 2: Defining Learning
Epistemology of Learning
What is learning?
What does it
mean to learn
something?
How can you
tell when
you’ve learned
something?
Part 2: Defining Learning
Learning is…
Greater Understanding (50-
70%)
Skill Acquisition (25-35%)
Total ≈ 90% (Theory-in-use)
Part 2: Defining Learning
Learning is…
Greater Understanding (50-
70%)
Skill Acquisition (25-35%)
Total ≈ 90% (Theory-in-use)
Part 2: Defining Learning
These are lower-order thinking skills on
Bloom’s taxonomy
Learning is…
Affective change (5-15%)
Habit formation/integration (>5%)
Espoused Theory
Part 2: Defining Learning
Learning is…
…a relatively durable
change in behavior caused
by experience.
…a change in the neuron
patterns in the brain.
(Goldberg, 2009)
Part 2: Defining Learning
A Teacher’s Definition of Learning
Learning is the ability to use information
after significant period of disuse… and
The ability to use the information to
solve problems that arise in a context
different (if only slightly) from the
context in which the information was
originally taught. (Robert Bjork,
Memories and Metamemories, 1994)
Part 2: Defining Learning
Habit makes Character
We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.
Good habits formed at youth make all the difference.
~Aristotle
Character is simply habit long continued.
~PlutarchPart 2: Defining Learning
Our existing epistemologies of
learning lead to cramming and
forgetting—and failure (surface
approach).
Epistemology of Learning
Part 2: Defining Learning
Facilitating durable learning
depends on changing attitudes
and forming new habits. (You only
keep what you value and use
regularly.)
Epistemology of Learning
Part 2: Defining Learning
Learning is Forming New
Habits
Fueled by attitudes and desires (emotion)
Supported by skills and understanding
Stephen R. Covey, The 7 Habits of Highly
Effective People
Knowledge/Understanding
Skills
Attitudes
Habits
Epistemology of Learning
How we define learning
• shapes how students learn more than how
we define teaching or our course goals
• because it defines how we assess learning.
Part 2: Defining Learning
Which paradigm? What do
we assess?
Assessment methods derive from the instructor’s
epistemology of learning:
We test to find out what students have learned,
not whether we taught them well.
St1 St2
Teacher/Coach
A Solution: Teach MetaLearning
10-20% FAIL to complete
college
10-20% complete college but with a
MEDIOCRE EDUCATION
30-60% EXCELL
If we can help students Learn how to learn:
Taking up to 20% of class time to teach
metalearning yields better progress toward
learning outcomes
Teaching MetaLearning
Teach students how to learn for the 21st
century
In an environment of rapid change, ability to learn quickly and effectively determines success in life
Metalearning is based on current research in cognitive science, neurobiology and learning theory
Ten years’ worth of data and experience show that it makes a significant difference in students’ learning
It’s especially effective in making students more self-motivated and more self-directed learners
MetaLearning’s Promise
This is no panacea; it will be difficult at first. It will take everyone a while to unlearn old habits and to develop new ones. (It takes ~21 days to break in a new habit.)
The payoff is that your students will learn more, learn faster and retain what they learn longer—thus, the performance of faculty will increase as well.
Start with one day—the first day of class, perhaps.
Epistemology of MetaLearning: 6 Steps to Changing Learning Habits
Maintain Maintain those habits
Practice Develop effective learning practices
Strategies Derive strategies and tactics from principles
Mechanics Teach students how learning works and derive guiding principles
Alignment Align their definitions of learning with ours
Motivation Help students discover self-motivations for learning
Step 3: The ART of Learning
Acquire new material
Retain new material
Transfer use of new material
Acquire
Retain
Transfer
Part 3: How Learning Works
The ART of Learning.
The A in ART is for Acquisition
Mnemonic:
Actively
Build
Connections
Part 3: How Learning Works
#1 Learning IS Making
Connections
Learning ONLY
happens when
it is active and
intentional.
Part 3: How Learning Works
Keeping students
engaged is vital
Learning IS making connections:
Neurons that fire together wire
together
2 pyramidal neurons
forming a synapse
Part 3: How Learning Works
Focus teaching on helping
students connect new
information to old (not on
uptake of content).
Analogies!
Ideas are patterns of
neural firing
Part 3: How Learning Works
More complex ideas are more
complex patterns—made up of
smaller patterns
Part 3: How Learning Works
Get students to focus on patterns and
meaning, not on facts and information
Learning IS Making
Connections
Learning has the physical and metaphorical
structure of an analogy.
Therefore we must teach analogically, not de
novo.
“Nothing we learn can stand in isolation; we can
sustain new learning only to the degree we can
relate it to what we already know.” (Sci Am
Mind, July 2010.)
Part 3: How Learning Works
Focus on helping students make connections between
what they know and what they are trying to learn
A Basic Brain—not very fold-ey
Part 3: How Learning Works
#2 Learning Changes the Brain
A Better Brain—more fold-ey
Part 3: How Learning Works
Make sure relevant learning happens every day
in every class session (to increase plasticity)
Learning Increases Brain
Plasticity
Therefore we need our students to regularly
experience sustained, challenging learning tasks
The more they learn, the better learners they will
become
Analogy: Like building muscle or learning a
foreign language (use it or lose it/working makes
it stronger)
Part 3: How Learning Works
New Brain Cells
Forming
#3 Learning Hard Stuff Grows
Your Brain
Part 3: How Learning Works
Prefer the difficult path over
the easy one: you’ll learn
more and feel better.
Learning Builds and Maintains
Healthy Neurons
Part 3: How Learning Works
Provide opportunities for learning that constantly
challenge students
Learning works best when it is
difficult
Therefore, we must teach our students
to seek challenge
Always prefer the difficult over the
routine or the easy
Optimal learning occurs in “flow
state”—midway between boredom and
anxiety
Analogy: crosswords and sudokus
Part 3: How Learning Works
Rekindle students’ love of learning by helping them find
optimal levels of challenge
Difficulty Increases Engagement
Based on Flow, by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
(2002)
Part 3: How Learning Works
The ART of Learning:
Habits of Acquisition
• Paying attention/active learning
• Not multitasking (microbreaks)
• Seeking connections and analogies
• Focus on patterns
• Work your brain every day/practice
• Seek difficulty
• Note-Taking
• Reading strategies
Part 3: How Learning Works
Step 3: The ART of Learning
Acquire new material
Retain new material
Transfer use of new material
Acquire
Retain
Transfer
Part 3: How Learning Works
Reading Strategies
Pre-Read
Determine context and purpose (motivation)
Scan the prominent features of the text (priming)
Think about what you know now (metacognition)
Read Critically
Two highlighters and a pen (metacog & connections)
Reading journal or notebook (metacog & connections)
Post-Reading
Review and reflect [pre-reading and notes] (metacog)
Summary before switching gears/before sleep (retain)
Review within 24 hours (retain)
Part 4: Strategies
Strategies and TacticsGet enough sleep—
New research shows that mental
performance drops off quite sharply if you don’t get at least six hours of sleep per
night regularly. You cannot learn some
things without this amount of sleep: long-
chain reasoning problems, persistence,
etc.
Teenagers need 9-10 hours of sleep for
optimum brain performance.
You’ll perform better on the test if you are
well-rested than if you have stayed up
most of the night reviewing the material
one more time.
Part 4: Application
Strategies and Tactics
Exercise regularly
and early—
Moving blood and
oxygen to your brain
helps it work more
effectively.
BDNF makes it easier
to make
connections.
Part 4: Strategies
Strategies and Tactics
Make sure you are properly hydrated and nourished.
Water is key. Even a modest amount of dehydration decreases your reasoning ability by 20%. (Don’t overdo it—over-hydration also adversely affects cognition.)
If what you eat comes through a car window or if the label lists ingredients with numbers, it isn’t food.
Color your plate: the best brain foods are blueberries, whole grains, oily fish, tomatoes, avocados, broccoli and nuts.
Hard mental work is equally taxing to the body as hard physical work—you have to nourish it to sustain peak performance.
Part 4: Strategies
Strategies and Tactics
Caffeine, Nicotine and Alcohol Caffeine and sugar both inhibit learning
and recall, especially in large quantities (>200 mg). When combined in smallquantities, they can provide a boost (equivalent to a walk around the block).
Nicotine helps you form new connections so it is a useful aid to learning (if you already smoke).
Alcohol impairs the brain’s ability to form new connections and to recall old ones. But… if you drink while studying, drink before the test too.
Part 4: Strategies
Step 5: Practice (verb and noun)
Note-taking
Reading strategies
Finding analogies
Seeking difficulty
Classroom mantras
Part 5: Practice
Prochaska’s Change Model
1st – Pre-Contemplation
2nd – Contemplation
3rd – Planning
4th – Taking Conscious
Action
5th – Maintaining
the New Behavior
Part 6: Maintenance
Evidence MetaLearning Works
Control Metalearners (Jr) Metalearners (Sr)
Dean’s List (top 10%
of class) 10% 40% 45%Honor societies
X 3.2XCampus Leadership
positions X 2.7X
The quality of the work my students do now is better in every way than the work my students did before I started using these methods.
Evidence MetaLearning Works
Thank You!
Write your summaries:
(What did you learn?)
3-5 sentences
in 3-5 minutes
A Challenge:
Keeping Father Guido Away
The 5-Minute University
MetaLearning Activity
Brain Plasticity: What
does this assignment
require them to learn
that they don’t already
know?
Difficulty: In what way
is this assignment
difficult? What specific
challenges does it
pose to students?
Connections: How
does this assignment
help students make
connections from what
they already know to
the new material?
Habits: What new
habits that will be
essential to learning in
your course does this
assignment build?